CCMA Information


Labour Court Judgements

Health and Safety



Most recent publications


UIF

AARTO



Discipline & Dismissal


Contracts of Employment

Poor performance



Conditions of Employment


Consumer Protection Act

Courses & Workshops 2012



Employment Equity


FAQs

Retrenchments



Contact Us


COID

Regular Concerns

 

Newsletter Signup

Your Email Address: *
 

1

 

facebook
twitter

 

Dereliction of duty charges must be proven

Ivan Israelstam

 

Dereliction of duty is a charge that is tempting for employers to use especially when they are angry with the employee concerned. This is because:

  • the phrase ‘dereliction of duty’ has a serious and damaging ring to it; and
  • the penalty for a first offence of gross dereliction of duty could be dismissal.
 

However, employers need to be extremely careful before using this charge because it has a very specific meaning referring to a intentional or conscious failure of an employee to do his/her duty. Collins Concise dictionary defines dereliction as “conscious or willful neglect” (especially of duty). The Dictionary of English Synonyms lists, as synonyms for dereliction, “abandonment” and “desertion” which terms have a connotation of intentional failure to do one’s duty. In practice this type of misconduct occurs fairly frequently. Examples include situations where the employee:

 

  • Abandons an asset of the employer in a place where it as at risk. For instance, a company driver might leave the company vehicle in order to visit a friend despite being well aware that the location is a crime ridden neighbourhood
  • Ignores the client’s he/she is supposed to be serving in order to finish off the cashing up or administrative work early
  • Knowingly fails to switch on the safety device of a machine operated by a subordinate or colleague
  • Downloads data from a website that the employee knows is infested with viruses
  • Fails to implement the spy ware security procedures because he/she is in a hurry to leave
  • Desserts his post as a security officer without an acceptable reason
  • Gives the strong room keys to an unauthorized person in order to be able to go on a long lunch
 

Dereliction of duty cannot be used in every case where employees have performed their work poorly or failed to carry out instructions. Such problems can very often result, not from intentional or conscious decisions, but from lack of skill, faulty equipment, misunderstanding of the instruction, over zealousness or other less sinister reasons. Regardless of how seriously the latter list of causes might be viewed they do not constitute dereliction of duty because they lack the element of intent or consciousness.

 

Furthermore, even where an employer truly believes that the employee’s failure to perform is intentional, the employer still has the onus of proving this contention. The employer, enraged because he/she lost a client due to the employee’s bungle, might fire him/her for dereliction of duty. The employer is basing the charge, not on evidence of intentional neglect, but on the infuriating and disastrous consequence of the botch up.

 

Thus, where employers allow emotion to enter into the equation, they often come off second best at the CCMA or bargaining council. For example, in the case of Joseph vs Standard Bank of SA (2001, 8 BALR 868) Joseph was dismissed for breaching the rule that there must be at least two officials present when money was being prepared for collection. The CCMA commissioner found that Joseph had in fact broken this rule and was guilty of dereliction of duty. However, as the manager concerned had charged the employee out of “spite” rather than out of concern for the security of the bank, the arbitratore found that the dismissal was unfair. The employer was therefore required to pay the employee 12 months’ remuneration in compensation.

 

The main danger is that dereliction of duty is too often used as overkill when a charge of ordinary poor performance or negligence would do. However, the opposite mistake is also made. This is where the employee’s poor performance is permeated with willful failure to do his/her duty with serious consequences but the employer disciplines the employee for mere poor performance and gives him/her a warning. This gives the employee the wrong message that what he did was not serious. It also may set a precedent for other employees who might ‘get away with murder’ because the first case set too low standards on which performance is measured. The employer will have then to put up with a series of repeated cases of dereliction of duty and the damage it causes before being able to dismiss the employee.

 

In the light of the above dangers employers are advised to use experts in labour law to:

 

  • Draw up their workplace rules and standards of performance
  • Train management in implementing discipline and control
  •  Analyze suspected infringements in order to choose the legally appropriate wording for the charges against errant employees.


lvan lsraelstam is the Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944 or 0828522973 or via e-mail address: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .


Our appreciation to Ivan and The Star newspaper for permission to publish this article…




 

Courses & Workshops


Investigators & Initiators

24 & 25 May 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport



Health and Safety Representative Course

25 May 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

14 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

 

30, 31 May & 01 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

New Amendment Bills for the Labour Relations Act (LRA) and the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA)

07 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

13 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

  
Basic Labour Relations

07 June 2012 

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

08 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City: Canal Walk: Cape Town  

Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment
08 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
05 July 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
17 August 2012
Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks
   
Chairing Disciplinary Hearings
20 & 21 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

Recruitment, Selection and Appointment of Candidates
22 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
27 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

Policies & Procedures
14 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Managing Day to Day Issues/ Problem Employees

28 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Health and Safety Incident/Accident Investigation (OHS and Mine Health and Safety)

29 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
06 July 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

15 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks


The OHS Act and Responsibilities of Management

04 July 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

16 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

  
Our Clients

Click here for a list of companies/ institutions that attended public courses and/or in-house training courses presented by Labour Guide during 2011



 
seta

Contact Details
Training courses,seminars and conferences

Labour Law and IR Related Workshops
(012) 661 3208
Fax: (012) 661 1411
Peraldo This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or Magda This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Susan Brits This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Contact Details
Health and Safety 


Health and Safety Related Workshops
(012) 666 8284
Fax: (012) 666 8264
Deidre This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Tinus Boshoff This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it